Press

Press Release

12/10/2007
FINAL JUDGING PANEL ANNOUNCED FOR 2007

COSTA BOOK OF THE YEAR

- Musician, writer and farmer Alex James, GQ editor, Dylan Jones, actress and writer, Helen Lederer and BBC news presenter, Emily Maitlis, confirmed as final judges

- Bestselling author, Joanna Trollope to chair

- Writers Polly Samson, David Almond, Danny Danziger and Vicki Feaver complete the panel

London 10th December 2007:  Musician, writer and farmer Alex James will be a member of the final judging panel which selects the overall winner of the prestigious 2007 Costa Book of the Year, worth ?25,000, it was announced today. 

The Costa Book Awards recognise the most enjoyable books of the last year by writers based in the UK and Ireland.

Alex joins a panel chaired by bestselling author, Joanna Trollope, which also includes GQ editor, Dylan Jones, BBC news presenter Emily Maitlis, and actress and writer, Helen Lederer, who is also representing the Costa First Novel Award category.

The other four category judging panels are represented by authors Polly Samson (Novel), David Almond (Children's Book Award), Vicki Feaver (Poetry) and Danny Danziger (Biography). 

The final judges will meet on Tuesday 22nd January 2008, to select the winner of the Costa Book of the Year, which will be announced at a ceremony later that evening.

The awards ceremony will be hosted for the second year in a row by journalist and broadcaster Mariella Frostrup, herself a final judge in 2004.

Commenting on the announcement, Joanna Trollope said: "This prize, in its various incarnations, has always been my favourite by a very long way, because it's about the sheer - and vital - pleasure of reading, rather than anything more arcane. And so I'm thrilled and honoured to be chairing the Costa Book Awards final judging panel this year".

John Derkach, Managing Director, Costa added: "The Costa Book Awards celebrate the best of British writing and aim to select books that can be enjoyed by everyone. Costa is delighted to have a final judging panel of such distinguished personalities, all of whom share a passion for great writing and a good read, to undertake the task of selecting the 2007 Costa Book of the Year."

Former final judges have included Erin O'Connor, Emilia Fox, Michael Morpurgo, Hugh Grant, Ralph Fiennes, Jerry Hall, Ian Hislop, Jonathan Ross, and Kirsty Young.  Recent winners of the Book of the Year include Stef Penney (2006), Hilary Spurling (2005), Andrea Levy (2004), Mark Haddon (2003), Philip Pullman, Seamus Heaney and the late Ted Hughes. 

 

www.costabookawards.com

  

For further press information, images or to arrange an interview with a final judge, please contact:

 

Amanda Johnson

Costa Book Awards Press and Publicity

Telephone: 0207 751 2111 (direct line) or 07715 922180 (mobile)

Email:  amanda@amandajohnsonpr.com

 

Notes for Editors:

 

  • The Costa Book Awards, formerly the Whitbread Book Awards, were established in 1971 to encourage, promote and celebrate the best contemporary British writing.

  • The total prize fund for the Costa Book Awards stands at ?50,000. The award winners from the five categories - Novel, First Novel, Biography, Poetry and Children's Book - each receive ?5,000.
  • The overall Costa Book of the Year is selected from the five category Award winners with the winner receiving a further ?25,000. The winner will be announced at the awards ceremony at the Intercontinental Hotel, central London on 22nd January, 2008.
  • To be eligible for the 2007 awards, books must have been first published in the UK or Ireland between 1 November 2006 and 31 October 2007.
  • The 2006 winner of the Costa Book of the Year was Stef Penney for The Tenderness of Wolves (Quercus).

       

      About Costa:

      • Costa is officially the largest and fastest-growing coffee shop brand in the UK.
      • Costa was founded by Italian brothers Sergio and Bruno Costa in 1971. With 650 stores in the UK and over 200 internationally, Costa has enjoyed a remarkable period of growth since it opened its first store. It now operates in 22 countries.
      • Costa's in-store baristas are all coached in the art of coffee making at the company's unique Costa Coffee Academy based at its own roastery in Lambeth, London.
      • Costa won the 2007 award for Best International Franchise Operator.
      • Costa is part of the Whitbread family of brands.

       

      2007 Costa Book Awards:

       

      Final Judging Panel Biographies

       

      Joanna Trollope (Chair): Author

      Author of eagerly awaited and sparklingly readable novels often centred around the domestic nuances and dilemmas of life in contemporary England, Joanna Trollope is also the author of a number of historical novels and of Britannia's Daughters, a study of women in the British Empire. In 1988 she wrote her first contemporary novel, The Choir, and this was followed by A Village Affair, A Passionate Man, The Rector's Wife, The Men and the Girls, A Spanish Lover, The Best of Friends, Next of Kin, Other People's Children, Marrying the Mistress, Girl from the South, Brother and Sister and Second Honeymoon. Her latest novel, Friday Nights, is out in February 2008. She lives in London and was awarded an OBE for services to literature in 1996.

       

      David Almond: Author (representing the Children's Book Award panel)

      David Almond is known worldwide as the author of Skellig, Kit's Wilderness, Clay and many other novels, stories and plays. His work is translated into thirty languages and he has won a string of major awards, including the Carnegie Medal, two Whitbreads, two Smarties Prizes and The Michael L Pritz Award (USA). His latest book, published in Oct 2007, is My Dad's a Birdman. This will be followed next year by The Savage, illustrated by Dave McKean; a new novel, The Foundling; and an opera of Skellig. He lives with his family in Northumberland.

       

      Danny Danziger: Writer and columnist (representing the Biography Award panel)

      Danny Danziger is a broadcaster, columnist on the Sunday Times, and an author. His Year 1000 was a number one bestseller and his latest book, which was published this summer in America, is a profile of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

       

      Vicki Feaver: Poet and painter (representing the Poetry Award panel)

      Vicki Feaver is the author of three poetry collections: Close Relatives (1981); The Handless Maiden (1994), winner of the Heinemann Award and shortlisted for the Forward Poetry Prize for Best Poetry Collection of the Year; and The Book of Blood which was shortlisted for the 2006 Costa Poetry Award.  She is a former tutor of Creative Writing at University College, Chichester, and now lives in South Lanarkshire, Scotland.

       

      Alex James: Musician, songwriter, artist, journalist, broadcaster and farmer

      Alex James is best known as the bass player in the band Blur, who have released eight albums to date, five of which reached number one. He lives with his wife and three young children on his farm in Oxfordshire, which he is converting to organic status. The farm produces award-winning lamb, and "Little Wallop", a goat's cheese which won a silver medal at the 2007 Great British Cheese awards.  Alex writes for a number of publications, including a monthly column for Q and a weekly column for the Independent. He is also an Associate Editor of the Spectator.  Alex presents "On Your Farm" for BBC Radio 4 and is artist-in-residence at Oxford University's Astrophysics Department. His autobiography, Bit of a Blur, was published in June 2007.

       

      Dylan Jones: Editor British GQ

      Dylan Jones is the Editor of British GQ.  He studied design and photography at Chelsea School of Art and St. Martins School of Art in London before becoming the Editor of i-D magazine in 1984.  He has since been an Editor at The Face, Arena, The Observer and The Sunday Times.  He has won the BSME Editor of the Year award four times, once for his work on Arena, and three times for GQ.  He has published an international bestselling biography of Jim Morrison (Dark Star), a biography of Paul Smith (True Brit) and two anthologies of journalism (Meaty, Beaty, Big & Bouncy and Sex, Power and Travel). iPod, Therefore I Am was published in 2005, and  his latest book, Mr Jones Rules has just been published.

                                   

      Helen Lederer: Actress and writer (representing the First Novel Award panel)

      From the early days at the famous Comedy Store in London, to creating the ?girl at the bar' in BBC's Naked Video, not to mention becoming Catriona, the ditzy journalist in Absolutely Fabulous, Helen has enjoyed the unique position of having starred in most top TV comedy and radio shows.  Her theatre experience includes following hot on the heels of Julie Walters in Educating Rita, playing Doreen in Alan Bleasdale's Having a Ball, and performing in London's West End The Vagina Monologues.  She is also a sought-after columnist and her work regularly appears in a variety of national press including Woman & Home, EVE, Independent Magazine, Mail on Sunday and Telegraph.  Helen is currently developing a sitcom for BBC-2, a comedy novel and a number of TV projects.

        

       

      Emily Maitlis: BBC News Presenter

      Emily Maitlis presents Newsnight on BBC-2, news bulletins on BBC-1 and rolling news coverage on News 24. She has also worked alongside David Dimbleby to host Election coverage specials and the Budget and was recently nominated for an RTS award.  She previously worked at BBC London News, London's flagship news programme on BBC-1. Before joining the BBC she worked for Sky News in this country, and for NBC News in Hong Kong, as a business correspondent.  Emily has also written for The Guardian and The Spectator, for whom she is now a Contributing Editor.  She lives in West London with her husband and two sons.

       

      Polly Samson: Author and lyricist (representing the Novel Award panel)

      Polly Samson's novel, Out of the Picture and short story collection Lying in Bed are published by Virago.  She has written lyrics for The Division Bell (Pink Floyd) and On an Island (David Gilmour).  Her first career was in publishing and she became a Director of Jonathan Cape in 1988. For several years she wrote features and a weekly column for the Sunday Times.  She has also written for BBC Radio 4.  She writes occasional features and reviews, most recently in The Guardian.

      www.costabookawards.com

       

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